大学英语四级107及答案解析.doc
《大学英语四级107及答案解析.doc》由会员分享,可在线阅读,更多相关《大学英语四级107及答案解析.doc(28页珍藏版)》请在麦多课文档分享上搜索。
1、大学英语四级 107及答案解析(总分:746.54,做题时间:130 分钟)一、Writing (30 minutes)(总题数:1,分数:30.00)1.For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a letter of refusal. You should write at least 120 words, and base your composition on the outline given below in Chinese: 假设朋友 Gary 邀请你参加一个聚会,但你因故不能参加,写信向他说明原因,并祝聚会成功。 (分
2、数:30.00)_二、Reading Comprehensio(总题数:1,分数:71.00)SAVING LANGUAGE There is nothing unusual about a single language dying. Communities have come and gone throughout history, and with them their language. But what is happening today is extraordinary, judged by the standards of the past. It is language ex
3、tinction on a large scale. According to the best estimates, there are some 6, 000 languages in the world. Of course, about half are going to die out in the course of the next century: thats 3,000 language in 1,200 months. On average, there is a language dying out somewhere in the world every two wee
4、ks or so. How do we know? In the course of the past two or three decades, linguists all over the world have been gathering comparative data. If they find a language with just a few speakers left, and nobody is bothering to pass the language on to the children, they conclude that language is bound to
5、 die out soon. And we have to draw the same conclusion if a language has less than 100 speakers. It is not likely to last very long. A 1999 survey shows that 97 per cent of the worlds languages are spoken by just four percent of the people. It is too late to do anything to help many languages, where
6、 the speakers are too few or too old, and where the community is too busy just trying to survive to care about their language. But many languages are not in such a serious position. Often, where languages are seriously endangered, there are things that can be done to give new life to them. It is cal
7、led revitalization. Once a community realizes that its language is in danger, it can start to introduce measures which can genuinely revitalize. The community itself must want to save its language. The culture of which it is a part must need to have a respect for minority languages. There need to be
8、 funding to support courses, materials, and teachers. And there need to be linguists to get on with the basic task of putting the language down on paper. Thats the bottom line: getting the language documentedrecorded, analyzed, written down. People must be able to read and write down. People must be
9、 able to read and write if they and their language are to have a future in an increasingly computer-literate civilization. But can we save a few thousand languages, just like that? Yes, if the will and funding were available. It is not cheap getting linguists into the field, training local analysts,
10、 supporting the community with language resources and teachers, compiling grammars and dictionaries, writing materials for use in schools. It takes time, lots of it, to revitalize an endangered language. Conditions vary so much that it is difficult to generalize, but a figure of $ 900 millions, is n
11、ot only stopping its steady decline towards extinction but showing signs of real growth. Two language Acts protect the status of Welsh now, and its presence is increasingly in evidence wherever you travel in Wales. On the other side of the world, Maori in New Zealand has been maintained by a system
12、of so-called “language nests“, first introduced in 1982. These are organizations which provide children under five with a domestic setting in which they are all intensively exposed to the language. The staff are all Maori speakers from the local community. The hope is that the children will keep the
13、ir Maori skills alive after leaving the nests, and that as they grow older they will in turn become role models to a new generation of young children. There are cases like this all over the world. And when the reviving language is associated with a degree of political autonomy, the growth can be esp
14、ecially striking, as shown by Faroese, spoken in the Faroe Islands, after the islanders received a measure of autonomy from Denmark. In Switzerland, Romansch was facing a difficult situation, spoken in five very different dialects, with small and diminishing numbers, as young people left their commu
15、nity numbers in the German-speaking cities. The solution here was the creation in the 1980s of a unified written language for all these dialects. Romansch Grischun, as it is now called, has official status in parts of Switzerland, and is being increasingly used in spoken form on radio and television
16、. A language can be brought back from the very brink of extinction. The Ainu language of Japan, after many years of neglect and repression, had reached a stage where there were only eight fluent speakers left, all elderly. However, new government policies brought fresh attitudes and a positive inter
17、est in survival. Several “semispeakers“ people who become unwilling to speak Ainu because of the negative attitudes by Japanese speakers were prompted to become active speakers again. There is fresh interest now and the language is more publicly available than it has been for years. If good descript
18、ions and materials arc available, even extinct languages can be revived. Kaurna, from South Australia, is an example. This language had been extinct for about a century, but had been quite well documented. So, when a strong movement grew for its revival, it was possible to reconstruct it. The revise
19、d language is not the same as the original, of course. It lacks the range that the original had, and much of the old vocabulary. But it can nonetheless act as a badge of present-day identity for its people. And as long as people continue to value it as a true marker of their identity, and are prepar
20、ed to keep using it, it will develop new functions and new vocabulary, as any other living language would do. It is too soon to predict the future of these revived languages, but in some parts of the world they are attracting precisely the range of positive attitudes and grass roots support which ar
21、e the preconditions for language survival. In such unexpected but heart-warming ways might we see the grand total of languages in the world increased. (分数:71.00)(1).The rate at which languages are becoming extinct has increased.(分数:7.10)A.YB.NC.NG(2).Research on the subject of language extinction be
22、gan in the 1990s.(分数:7.10)A.YB.NC.NG(3).In order to survive, a language needs to be spoken by more than 100 people.(分数:7.10)A.YB.NC.NG(4).Language extinct more quickly in certain parts of the world than in others.(分数:7.10)A.YB.NC.NG(5).The small community whose language is under threat can take meas
23、ures to revitalize the language.(分数:7.10)A.YB.NC.NG(6).A few thousand languages can be saved if enough funds are raised to do so.(分数:7.10)A.YB.NC.NG(7).A extinct language can never be revived no matter what you do about it.(分数:7.10)A.YB.NC.NG(8).Romansch Gri schun is a (an)_language in parts of Swit
24、zerland.(分数:7.10)_(9).The example of Ainu illustrates that a language can be saved_.(分数:7.10)_(10).The preconditions for a language to survive is the peoples_.(分数:7.10)_三、Listening Comprehens(总题数:1,分数:15.00)A.At a theatre.B.At a booking office.C.At a railway station.D.At a restaurant.A.The man is in
- 1.请仔细阅读文档,确保文档完整性,对于不预览、不比对内容而直接下载带来的问题本站不予受理。
- 2.下载的文档,不会出现我们的网址水印。
- 3、该文档所得收入(下载+内容+预览)归上传者、原创作者;如果您是本文档原作者,请点此认领!既往收益都归您。
下载文档到电脑,查找使用更方便
2000 积分 0人已下载
下载 | 加入VIP,交流精品资源 |
- 配套讲稿:
如PPT文件的首页显示word图标,表示该PPT已包含配套word讲稿。双击word图标可打开word文档。
- 特殊限制:
部分文档作品中含有的国旗、国徽等图片,仅作为作品整体效果示例展示,禁止商用。设计者仅对作品中独创性部分享有著作权。
- 关 键 词:
- 大学 英语四 107 答案 解析 DOC
